The Late Amy Laus Enduring Design Legacy Is Summed Up in One Highly Personal Project
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Amy Lau passed away in January 2025 at the age of 56. The designers Manhattan apartment, completed just months before her woefully premature death, perfectly captures her incisive eye and her steadfast belief in the ennobling power of great design. It is the final grace note to a singular life spent in the pursuit of beauty and joy.Surveying Amy Laus stellar home in New Yorks historic Alwyn Court, one cant help but lament the loss of one of the design worlds most original voices. Amy was a font of optimism and wonder, a champion of art and design placed in the service of a life well-lived. Her apartment brilliantly synthesizes the many threads of her storied career: her virtuosity in marshaling ideal scale, proportion, and shape; her fearless embrace of color as a mode of emotional expression; her refusal to draw artificial distinctions between fine art and fine design; and her drive to conjure interior worlds redolent of curiosity, connoisseurship, and pure delight.Amy told AD that living in Alwyn Court had been a long-standing dream. This building holds a special place in my heart. Ive passed the landmark countless times over the course of my years in New York City, and I was always captivated by the intricate beauty of its ornate faade, she said. Built between 1907 to 1909, the 12-story tower by architecture firm Harde and Short is easily recognizable for its elaborate terracotta decoration, which includes a crush of cherubs, crests, salamanders, scrolls, and vines. A block from Central Park, the Plaza Hotel, and 5th Avenues luxury shops, Alwyn Court quickly became one of the citys most expensive addresses after it opened to its first residents. But to Amy, it represented far more than a reputation or a swanky address: It was an opportunity to create a personal environment that tells my own story within an icon of New Yorks design history, she said.By the time Amy acquired her roughly 950-square-foot, one-bedroom apartment, its original interior detailing had long been stripped away. But, characteristically, where others saw only mute, blank space, Amy saw potential. She soon engaged Michael Schmitt Architect and set out on a gut renovation inspired by the glories of the past and the promise of a bright new future.Massachusetts-based sculptor Michael Coffey originally created the living rooms Mozambique wood fireplace surround for Amys Salon Art + Design booth in 2017. An ottoman by Joseph Walsh for Philippe Hetier stands in front of the fireplace by Hearth Cabinet.
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